There are two principles often found in environmental ethics – self-realisation and environmental preservation. I argue that these are two logically independent principles. An analysis of its essential features shows that the preservation principle should be based on actual consequentialism, for it is only the actual effects of our actions and policies that are important to the main issues of environmental preservation. Aldo Leopold's land ethic is found to be an example of a consequentialistic theory of environmental preservation.
CallicottJ. Baird1980 ‘Animal Liberation: A Triangular Affair’, Environmental Ethics2(4): 311–338.
2.
CallicottJ. Baird1987Companion to A Sand County Almanac.Madison, Wisconsin: University of Wisconsin Press.
3.
DevallBill and SessionsGeorge1985Deep Ecology. Layton, Utah: Peregrine Smith.
4.
DonaganAlan1977The Theory of Morality. Chicago, Illinois: University of Chicago Press.
5.
GoodinRobert E.1990 ‘Government House Utilitarianism’, in LincolnAllison (ed) The Utilitarian Response, pp. 140–60. London: Sage Publications.
6.
HolbrookDaniel1988Qualitative Utilitarianism. Lanham, Maryland: University Press of America.
7.
LeopoldAldo1949A Sand County Almanac. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
8.
RileyJonathan1990 ‘Utilitarian Ethics and Democratic Government’, in LincolnAllison (ed) The Utilitarian Response, pp. 161–92. London: Sage Publications.
9.
SartreJean-Paul1956Being and Nothingness, HazelBarnes (trans). New York: Philosophical Library.
10.
SchefflerSamuel (ed.) 1988Consequentialism and its Critics. Oxford: Oxford University Press.
11.
SingerPeter1986 ‘Animal Liberation’, in Van DeVeerDonald and PierceChristine (eds) People, Penguins, and Plastic Trees, pp. 24–32. Belmont, California: Wadsworth.
12.
TaylorPaul W.1981 ‘The Ethics of Respect for Nature’, Environmental Ethics3: 197–218.
13.
WilliamsBernard1973 ‘A Critique of Utilitarianism’, in Utilitarianism: For and Against, pp. 75–150. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.